Lamont-Goldsby v. Kaschmitter et al
Filing
38
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER ON DEFENDANTS MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT - Defendants Motion for Summary Judgment(Dkt. 24 ) is hereby GRANTED and the claims against Defendants hereby DISMISSED. Signed by Judge Ronald E. Bush. (caused to be mailed to non Registered Participants at the addresses listed on the Notice of Electronic Filing (NEF) by (cjs)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF IDAHO
ANDANTE LAMONT GOLDSBY,
Case No.1:14-cv-00032-REB
Plaintiff,
vs.
AMANDA KASCHMITTER, STEVEN
“JASON” RAMBO, JOAN
MCPHEETERS, AND DOES 1-X,
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND
ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION
FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (DKT.
24)
Defendants.
Plaintiff Andante Lamont Goldsby (“Goldsby”) is a prisoner in the custody of the
Idaho Department of Corrections (“IDOC”). He brings claims for violations of the First
and Fourteenth Amendments against various IDOC employees arising from his
participation in the retained jurisdiction or “Rider” program at North Idaho Correctional
Institution (“NICI”). All parties have consented the exercise of jurisdiction by a United
States Magistrate Judge. Defendants have filed a Motion for Summary Judgment alleging
that all claims against them should be dismissed due to Goldsby’s failure to exhaust intraprison administrative remedies. The Court has reviewed the briefing and the affidavits of
the parties and concludes that the decisional process would not be significantly aided by
oral argument, Idaho Local Rule 7.1(d)(1)(B), and accordingly, now issues the following
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER - 1
Order.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Goldsby is a forty-nine year old African American man who, until several years
ago, was a resident of Spokane, Washington. In 2012 he was arrested for driving under
the influence while driving in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. He was initially charged with
misdemeanor DUI, but the charges were later amended to felony DUI. His case came
before Idaho District Judge Fred Gibler, who sentenced him to a prison term of between
three and six years. Judge Gibler also elected to place Goldsby in Idaho’s retained
jurisdiction program, more commonly known “the Rider Program.” The Rider Program is
“a sentencing option where the judge imposes a sentence of incarceration, but retains
jurisdiction for a period of time. If the defendant is successful on programming while in
custody, the judge reconsiders whether to place the defendant on probation instead of
continuing his prison sentence.” Veenstra v. Blades, 2015 WL 8215701 at n. 2 (D. Idaho
2015); See also, Idaho Code § 19-2601. Inmates in the Rider Program are often those who
suffer from addiction to drugs or alcohol, and thus might benefit from a combination of
treatment programs and probation, as opposed to incarceration.
Goldsby began his participation in the Rider Program at NICI in December of
2012. Soon after his arrival, he was placed in an intense drug and alcohol treatment
program known as the “Therapeutic Community” or “TC Program.” (Amended
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER - 2
Complaint, Dkt. 12, ¶ 16). Goldsby asserts that he was the only black man in a group of
sixty-six TC participants. As soon as he entered this program, he began to have concerns
that his instructor, Defendant Amanda Kaschmitter, was biased against him because of his
race. (Id. ¶ 18). Goldsby raised these concerns with another NICI staff member, Officer
Plank, in January of 2013. Officer Plank told Golsby to write a concern form directed to
program supervisor Steve Rambo. (Id. ¶¶ 20-21). Goldsby did so, and was told by Mr.
Rambo that if he felt racial bias was an issue, he needed to follow the grievance process,
which meant submitting a concern form directed to Kaschmitter herself. (Id. ¶ 22).
Over the next few months, Goldsby alleges that he was subjected to a number of
racial slurs from Kaschmitter and other inmates at NICI. He alleges, for example, that on
February 1, 2013 Kaschmitter said to him, “I thought you and your kind of people were
supposed to jump and move fast,” when he was walking slowly in her vicinity. (Id. ¶ 23).
He also alleges that on March 27, 2013, Kaschmitter allowed another inmate in a TC
group meeting to make racially derogatory statement to the effect that no one wanted a “a
nappy looking guy representing them.” (Id. ¶ 25-26). On April 27, 2013, Kaschmitter
allegedly refused to accept Goldsby’s “Relapse Prevention Book” because he gave
“cookie cutter answers,” and told him not to resubmit it until July of 2013. (Amended
Complaint ¶ 29). Approximately two weeks later, on May 9, 2013, Goldsby filled out
another concern form alleging that racial discrimination by NICI staff was inhibiting his
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER - 3
ability to progress in the TC program. He submitted additional concern forms reiterating
these concerns on May 21, 2013, and again on May 23, May 29, and May 30th, 2013.
(Dkt. 31-1 p. 9, 11, 13, & 17). The tenor of each of these concern forms was that NICI
staff members, primarily Kaschmitter, were racially biased against him, and that this bias,
and Kaschmitter’s retaliation against him for raising the bias issue, was effectively
preventing his ability to progress in the Rider program.
In a recommendation dated June 21, 2013, Defendant Joanne McPheeters, another
NICI staff member, prepared an addendum to the pre-sentence report recommending that
Judge Gibler relinquish jurisdiction over Goldsby and sentence him to a term of
incarceration rather than allow him to be placed on probation. Though the parties have
not submitted this addendum to the Court, according to Plaintiff’s briefing the addendum
opined that Goldsby was manipulative and cited his accusations of racial bias against
Defendant Kaschmitter and other NICI staff as part of the basis for this assertion.
(Response Brief, Dkt. 29 at p. 8). On July 11, 2013, Judge Gibler held a hearing to assist
in deciding whether to allow Goldsby to be placed on probation or require him to serve
the remainder of his sentence in prison. Though the transcript of that hearing has not been
provided to the Court, Goldsby’s briefing asserts that Defendant Kaschmitter testified at
this hearing. Goldsby also asserts that in her testimony, Kaschmitter denied making
racially charged comments and also denied authorizing others to make such comments.
(Id. at p. 8-9). Ultimately, Judge Gibler decided to relinquish jurisdiction, and sentenced
Goldsby to a prison term of one year and six months fixed and four years and six months
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER - 4
indeterminate. (Id. ¶ 49).
Goldsby, acting pro se, filed this lawsuit on January 27, 2104. (Dkt. 3). He
subsequently obtained counsel, who filed a Verified Amended Complaint alleging
violations of the First and Fourteenth Amendments. (Dkt. 12). Defendants filed their
Motion for Summary Judgment on June 2, 2015, alleging that Goldsby’s claims are
barred because he failed to exhaust his administrative remedies.
In response to this motion, Goldsby argued, among other things, that he was not
required to complete the administrative grievance process for the claims at issue, because
“racial discrimination and retaliation by IDOC staff resulted in the district court
relinquishing jurisdiction over Goldsby and imposing his sentence,” and that sentencing
issues, per IDOC rules, are not issues that have to be grieved. (Response Brief, Dkt. 29, at
p. 14). In reply to this argument, Defendants contend that if, as Goldsby claimed in his
response, his damages related to his “loss of freedom” are the result of the adverse
sentencing decision, then the case would be barred by the doctrine articulated by the
Supreme Court in Heck v. Humphrey, which prevents a plaintiff from pursuing a section
1983 claim in federal court if a favorable verdict would necessarily imply the invalidity of
a state court conviction or sentence, unless the conviction or sentence has already been
expunged, overturned, or otherwise invalidated. Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477, 486-87
(1994). Because Defendants did not raise the Heck v. Humphrey issue until their reply
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER - 5
brief, the Court granted the Plaintiff an opportunity to respond to the issue in a sur-reply,
pursuant to Rule 56(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (Dkt. 36).
LEGAL STANDARDS
1.
Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is appropriate where a party can show that, as to a particular
claim or defense, “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). One of the principal
purposes of the summary judgment rule “is to isolate and dispose of factually unsupported
claims or defenses.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323-24 (1986). It is not “a
disfavored procedural shortcut,” but is instead the “principal tool[ ] by which factually
insufficient claims or defenses [can] be isolated and prevented from going to trial with the
attendant unwarranted consumption of public and private resources.” Id. at 327.
“[T]he mere existence of some alleged factual dispute between the parties will not
defeat an otherwise properly supported motion for summary judgment ....” Anderson v.
Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247-48 (1986). Rather, there must be no genuine
dispute as to any material fact in order for a case to survive summary judgment. Material
facts are those “that might affect the outcome of the suit.” Id. at 248. Disputes over facts
that are not material to the resolution of the motion will not preclude summary judgment.
T.W. Elec. Serv., Inc. v. Pac. Elec. Contractors Ass'n, 809 F.2d 626, 630 (9th Cir. 1987).
The moving party is entitled to summary judgment if that party shows that each
material fact cannot be disputed. To show that the material facts are not in dispute, a party
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may cite to particular parts of materials in the record, or show that the adverse party is
unable to produce admissible evidence to support the fact. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(1)(A) &
(B). The Court must consider “the cited materials,” but it may also consider “other
materials in the record.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(3).
If the moving party meets its initial responsibility, then the burden shifts to the
opposing party to establish that a genuine dispute as to any material fact actually does
exist. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 586 (1986). The
existence of a scintilla of evidence in support of the non-moving party's position is
insufficient. Rather, “there must be evidence on which the jury could reasonably find for
the [non-moving party].” Anderson, 477 U.S. at 252.
DISCUSSION
The Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (“PLRA”) requires that prisoners
exhaust all available administrative remedies within the prison system before they can
include the claims in a new or ongoing civil rights lawsuit challenging the conditions of
their confinement. 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). “Proper” exhaustion of administrative remedies
is required, meaning that the prisoner must comply “with [the prison’s] deadlines and
other critical procedural rules because no adjudicative system can function effectively
without imposing some orderly structure on the course of its proceedings.” Woodford v.
Ngo, 548 U.S. 81, 90-91 (2006). The exhaustion requirement ensures that prison officials
have “an opportunity to resolve disputes concerning the exercise of their responsibilities
before being haled into court.” Jones v. Bock, 549 U.S. 199, 204 (2007). If the defendant
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER - 7
initially shows that (1) an available administrative remedy existed and (2) the prisoner
failed to exhaust that remedy, then the plaintiff can only overcome summary judgment by
showing that there is something in his particular case that made the existing and generally
available administrative remedies effectively unavailable to him. Albino v. Baca, 747 F.3d
1162, 1169, 1171 (9th Cir. 2014) (en banc). Confusing or contradictory information given
to a prisoner, misinformation about grievance procedures, or lack of access to necessary
grievance forms are among the kinds of things that courts have held may effectively
interfere with inmate’s efforts to exhaust. Albino at 1172-73.
The IDOC’s grievance process consists of three stages. First, any inmate with a
concern is required to seek an informal resolution by filling out an Offender Concern
Form, addressed to the staff person “most capable of responding to and, if appropriate,
resolving the issue.” (Pavelec Aff., Dkt. 24-4, at ¶ 5.) If the issue cannot be resolved
informally through the use of a Concern Form, the inmate must then file a Grievance
Form. (Id. at ¶ 6.). A Grievance Form must be submitted within 30 days of the incident
giving rise to the grievance. If the inmate is not satisfied with the response to his/her
grievance, s/he may file an appeal. (Id.). When the Grievance Coordinator receives an
appeal, she is required to enter the appeal into the CIS database and forward the appeal to
the appellate authority. (Id. ¶ 9). Failure to file an appeal “completes the grievance
process on the issue grieved.” (Id. ¶ 7). Not until the completion of all three of these
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steps—Concern Form, Grievance Form, and grievance appeal—is the grievance process
exhausted. (Id. at ¶ 10.). The general process for exhausting administrative remedies
applies at NICI as well as other prisons within the IDOC system. (Westhoff Aff. Dkt. 245 at ¶ 3).
The issues related to Defendants’ exhaustion defense are simply stated as follows.
While Goldsby filled out multiple concern forms regarding the instances of bias he
experienced while at NICI, he never filed a grievance, let alone a grievance appeal, until
November of 2013–nearly five months after the allegedly discriminatory conduct had
occurred. Administrative exhaustion is a multi-step process, requiring not only a concern
forms, but also a grievance and a grievance appeal before a claim can properly be brought
in court, and further, any grievance must be submitted within thirty days of the offending
conduct. Goldsby did not do so in this case. Therefore, Defendants argue, unless he can
show that “there is something in his particular case that made the existing and generally
available administrative remedies effectively unavailable to him,” Albino 747 F.3d at
1172, his claims are barred.
Goldsby raises two primary defenses to Defendants’ exhaustion arguments. First,
he argues that because the IDOC has no authority over sentencing issues, including what3
the length of his sentence would be, he was not required to file a grievance at all. Second,
he argues that even if he was required to file a grievance, his failure to do so is excusable
in this case because he did not have access to his legal paperwork, and was not even given
instructions on how to complete the grievance process, after he was transferred from NICI
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to Kootenai County Jail in June of 2013.
In arguing that it was not necessary for him to file a grievance in the first place,
Goldsby makes the following assertions:
In this case, racial discrimination and retaliation by IDOC
staff resulted in the district court relinquishing jurisdiction
over Goldsby and imposing his sentence. The damages are
Goldsby’s loss of freedom, but the Board of Correction lacks
authority over the district court’s sentencing decisions. By the
defendants own admission, Goldsby does not have to grieve
issues like his sentence. . . . IDOC does not have authority to
put Goldsby on probation or even get him a hearing before the
Idaho Commission of Pardons and Parole. Accordingly the
IDOC grievance process is not an available remedy, and
Goldsby did not have to exhaust his administrative remedies.
Plaintiff’s brief, Dkt. 29, at p. 14. Goldsby is correct that the IDOC has no authority to
make sentencing determinations, Farnsworth v. Craven, 2007 WL 793397 at * 5 (D.
Idaho. 2007) (holding that prisoner seeking a new parole hearing need not follow the
standard IDOC procedures for grieving intra-prison complaints). It is equally true that
under the IDOC rules, an inmate need not follow the administrative exhaustion process
for issues that cannot be grieved. (Pavelec Affidavit, Dkt. 24-4 ¶ 6). Sentencing issues are
among the issues that cannot be grieved. (Id.). Therefore, to the extent that Goldsby is
using this case as a vehicle to challenge the validity of his underlying sentence, rather
than as a means of challenging the conditions of his confinement, he is correct that he did
not need to file a grievance. However, in seeking to avoid one bar to his claims he runs
straight into another – that of the Heck v. Humphrey doctrine.
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER - 10
1.
Heck v. Humphrey
In Heck v. Humphrey, the United States Supreme Court held that a plaintiff is
barred from pursuing a section 1983 claim in federal court if a favorable verdict in that
case would necessarily imply the invalidity of a state court conviction or sentence, unless
that conviction or sentence has already been expunged, overturned, or otherwise
invalidated. Heck, 512 U.S. 477, 486-87 (9th Cir. 1994). The basis for the Court’s decision
in Heck is that habeas corpus actions, not section 1983 claims, provide the sole vehicle
by which an inmate may bring a collateral challenge in federal court to the legality of a
state court conviction or sentence. Id.
Even though Heck v. Humphrey was identified as a possible bar to Plaintiff’s
claims in the Court’s Initial Review Order, (Dkt. 14), the parties have devoted relatively
scant attention to that issue in the present summary judgment motion. Because
Defendants did not raise the issue until their reply brief, the Court chose to (pursuant to
Rule 56(f)) give the Plaintiff an opportunity to submit a sur-reply addressing that issue.
(Dkt. 36). However, the sur-reply simply asserted, without elaboration, that because
Plaintiff’s Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Claim asserts that he was removed
from the Rider Program on the basis of his race, that it does not imply the invalidity of his
conviction or sentence. Goldsby’s argument as to why the Equal Protection claim should
not be dismissed pursuant to Heck v. Humphrey really boils down to the following
assertion in his brief: “ the lengthening of Mr. Goldsby’s sentence is an element of
damages proximately caused by his removal from the [rider] program, but is not the basis
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of his Equal Protection claim.” (Sur-Reply, Dkt. 37 ¶ 2). There is no persuasive sense to
the distinction Goldsby is apparently trying to make between the conduct giving rise to
the Equal Protection claim and the damages flowing from it, for purposes of the Heck
analysis. Simply arguing that the damages consist of “removal from the rider program”
does not save Goldsby’s claims, because in Idaho the Rider Program is inextricably
linked to the ultimate sentencing decisions that state court judges make as to whether to
send an inmate to prison or place him on probation. Further, Heck v. Humphrey bars not
just lawsuits that implicate the validity of the underlying conviction, but also to suits that
would necessarily invalidate the length of a prisoner’s confinement. Nelson v. Campbell,
541 U.S. 637, 646 (2004). Yet, that is exactly what Goldsby’s lawsuit aims to do.
Further, courts make no distinction between the underlying conduct giving rise to
a lawsuit and results or damages that flow from that conduct when applying the Heck v.
Humphrey analysis. In the analogous setting of civil rights cases where a plaintiff alleges
that an arrest was impermissibly tainted by racial profiling, courts have routinely held that
if a successful claim for racially discriminatory enforcement of the criminal law would
implicate a plaintiff’s conviction and sentence, the Heck v. Humphrey bar is triggered.
See, e.g. Cook v. Layton, 299 Fed Appx. 173, 174 (3d Cir. 2008); Sanders v. Fayetteville
City Police Dep’t., 150 Fed. Appx. 542, 543 (8th Cir. 2005); Gibson v. Superintendent of
N.J. Dept of Law, 411 F.3d 427, 441 (3d. Cir. 2005), (overruled on other grounds Dique
v. New Jersey State Police, 603 F.3d 181 (3d Cir. 2010); Cross v. Kings County Sheriff
Dept., 2014 WL 5107027 (E.D. Cal. 2014); Cano-Diaz v. City of Leeds, Ala., 882
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER - 12
F.Supp.2d 1280 (N.D. Alabama 2012); Allen v. Laporte, 2002 WL 1009563 at *1 (E.D.
Michigan 2002). In each of these cases, the courts determined that equal protection claims
arising from instances of alleged racial profiling (whether true or not) impermissibly
implicated a state court’s criminal conviction and sentence. In such a setting, unless the
conviction has been somehow invalidated, a habeas corpus action is the only avenue to
pursue claims for alleged constitutional violations. Goldsby does not assert that his
sentence has been expunged, overturned, or otherwise invalidated. Accordingly his
Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection claim is subject to dismissal.
2.
First Amendment Claim
Though Goldsby does not make the distinction in his briefing, the First
Amendment Claim may require a somewhat different analysis. Though Goldsby’s
submissions have never made clear precisely how his First Amendment rights were
violated, theoretically at least, the damages that might flow from a First Amendment
claim would not necessarily implicate his underlying conviction and sentence. Rather, the
damages associated with a First Amendment claim–namely any alleged restriction on
speech itself–can be seen as existing separately and independently from the underlying
criminal conviction and sentence. At least in this respect, it is possible to characterize
Goldsby’s claims as complaints relating to the conditions of his confinement, rather than
as claims that implicate the validity of his sentence under Heck.
However, even to the extent that the First Amendment claim can be characterized
as a more traditional condition of confinement-type claim, it is still subject to dismissal,
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER - 13
because even if his claims are so characterized, the administrative exhaustion
requirements would be fully applicable. Goldsby argues that he was effectively prevented
from completing the administrative grievance process after his transfer from NICI on
June 22 of 2013, and at least in the abstract, the Court agrees that issues of fact exist as to
whether he would have been able to file a grievance during this time frame. However,
grievances must be filed within thirty days after the offending conduct takes place and
here, the relevant concern forms refer to conduct that occurred on or before May 22,
2013, while Goldsby was still at NICI. More specifically, a careful review of the record
reveals that the incidents that form the basis of this lawsuit occurred largely in February,
March and April of 2013. (Reply Brief, Dkt. 31 at p. 7-8; McMasters Aff., Dkt. 31-1 at
Exhs. A-H). Even reading the record in a light most favorable to Goldsby, the Court
cannot identify any discrete incident arising after May 21, 2013, the date on which
Defendant Kaschmitter allegedly allowed another inmate to make a reference to “house
n*iggers” during a TC group meeting. On that same day, and then again on May 23,
2013, Goldsby submitted concern forms to Kaschmitter asserting that she had authorized
racial slurs and also asserting that she had “unfairly frozen” his progress in the TC
program. (Id. at Exhs. D & E). Even making the perhaps over-generous assumption that
the incident alleged here somehow implicated Goldsby’s First Amendment rights, as
opposed to his Fourteenth Amendment rights, any grievance relating to this conduct
needed to be filed no later than June 22, 2013, while Goldsby was still at NICI. Goldsby
did not do so, however, and for this reason, the obstacles to completion of the
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administrative review process that may have existed after Goldsby was transferred to
Kootenai County jail date are simply not relevant.
Finally, the Ninth Circuit’s recent decision in McBride v. Lopez, 807 F.3d 982, 987
(9th Cir. 2015), holding that fear of retaliation may excuse a failure to exhaust, does not
work in Goldsby’s favor. In the abstract, someone who believes he has been a victim of
racial discrimination might well hesitate to raise that issue with prison officials,
particularly in a setting like the Rider Program, where those officials may have some
influence over the recommendations that are ultimately made to the sentencing judge.
However, under McBride, an inmate must show not only that his fear of retaliation was
objectively reasonable, but also that he “actually believed prison officials would retaliate
against him if he filed a grievance.” 807 F.3d at 987 (emphasis added). Goldsby’s
multiple concern forms foreclose any argument that he was actually deterred from
pursuing a grievance.
To summarize, Goldsby’s primary claim, that he was removed from the Rider
Program in violation of his Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Rights, is not
cognizable here, because it implicitly calls into question the validity of his underlying
conviction and sentence, contrary to Heck v. Humphrey. To the extent that Goldsby’s
damages flowing from a First Amendment claim might not trigger the Heck v. Humprey
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER - 15
bar on collateral challenges to state court criminal convictions, they are nonetheless
subject to dismissal due to his failure to completely exhaust all administrative remedies
before filing suit. Pursuant to Ninth Circuit rules, these dismissals operate without
prejudice. See Trimble v. City of Santa Rosa, 49 F.3d 583 (9th Cir. 1995) (discussing Heck
v. Humphrey and noting that a prisoner can reassert a claim if he is successful in
overturning his conviction); Wyatt v. Terhune, 315 F.3d 1108, 1120 (9th Cir. 2003)
(overruled on other grounds by Albino v. Baca, 747 F.3d 1162 (9th Cir. 2103) (discussing
dismissals on the basis of exhaustion). See also Donley v. Fraker, 2012 WL 2395879 at *
4 (W.D. Wash. 2012) (holding that dismissal without prejudice is appropriate remedy
under PLRA even if further attempts to exhaust would be time-barred).
ORDER
1.
For all the foregoing reasons, Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment
(Dkt. 24) is hereby GRANTED and the claims against Defendants hereby
DISMISSED.
DATED: April 6, 2016
Honorable Ronald E. Bush
Chief U. S. Magistrate Judge
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